Answer:
My buckets got a hole in it, when its sleepy time down south
Explanation:
Answer:
To secure a tight control of the American continent and do away with the last redoubts of European presence.
Explanation:
In the 1890s, once the Indian Wars were over and the U.S. government had secured control of the whole country, its attention turned to the rest of the American continent south of the U,S, border, namely, Latin America. U.S. corporations coveted the abundance of natura resources and raw materials produced in smaller and politically unstable countries. On the one hand, these corporations wanted to acquire these resources at very low prices, well below their real worth in order to make the most profit, and on the other hand, they wanted the European powers out of the picture in America. The method used to secure these resources consisted of one of two lines of action: 1) make deals with the local rulers and bribe them to allow the U.S. corporations to control the production and extraction of raw materials or, 2) have the U.S. government send the Marines Corp to invade the countries where the rulers rejected the deals in order to depose such leaders and place "friendly" leaders in their place. These invasions of Latin American countries came to be known as the "Banana Wars" and the governments installed by the U.S. were called "Banana Republics" after bananas, a most coveted natural resource which grows in those regions.
<span>A)
a government ruled by an elected legislature and a prime minister</span>
Explanation:
The Schlieffen Plan (German: Schlieffen-Plan, pronounced [ʃliːfən plaːn]) was a name given after the First World War to German war plans, due to the influence of Field Marshal Alfred von Schlieffen and his thinking on an invasion of France and Belgium, which began on 4 August 1914. Schlieffen was Chief of the General Staff of the German Army from 1891 to 1906. In 1905 and 1906, Schlieffen devised an army deployment plan for a war-winning offensive against the French Third Republic. German forces were to invade France through the Netherlands and Belgium rather than across the common border. After losing the First World War, German official historians of the Reichsarchiv and other writers described the plan as a blueprint for victory. Generaloberst (Colonel-General) Helmuth von Moltke the Younger, succeeded Schlieffen as Chief of the German General Staff in 1906 and was dismissed after the First Battle of the Marne (5–12 September 1914). German historians claimed that Moltke had ruined the plan by meddling with it out of timidity.
The most severe punishment one group of countries has placed upon another.
France especially levied heavy reparations on Germany. This resulted in the ruining of the German economy, causing starvation and raising social and political unrest.
It is interesting that France actually started WW1. Austria Hungary was totally within it's rights as a sovereign Nation to act upon the uprising in Serbia. Deciding to declare war brought the world close to it's knees.
It's not surprising that the terms of the treaty of Versailles brought rise to National Socialism and Hitler through a populous movement.
In final analysis, the Treaty of Versailles was in essence a treaty designed to start WW2.